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Melanippe and name
: The name Melanippe is the feminine counterpart of Melanippus.
: The name Melanippus is the masculine counterpart of Melanippe.
Antiochus of Syracuse said that it was originally called Metabus, from a hero of that name, who appears to have been identified with the Metapontus who figured in the Greek mythical story as the husband of Melanippe and father of Aeolus and Boeotus.

Melanippe and one
She was also the wife of Oeneus, king of Calydon, and mother of five sons, Meleager, Melanippe ( one of the Meleagrids ), Toxeus, Thyreus, Clymenus, and two daughters, Deianeira and Gorge.

Melanippe and on
This Aeolus also had an illegitimate daughter named Arne, begotten on Melanippe, daughter of the Centaur Cheiron.

Melanippe and .
* Melanippe, sister of Hippolyta.
According to some accounts, Hippotes married the same Melanippe who was the mother of Arne.
Further complicating the narratives, a number of ancient writers say the Amazon in question wasn ’ t Hippolyta at all but her sister Antiope, Melanippe, or Glauce.
In Greek mythology, Otrera ( Greek: Οτρηρη Otrērē ) was a Queen of the Amazons ; the daughter of Eurus ( the east wind ), consort of Ares and mother of Hippolyta, Antiope, Melanippe and Penthesilea.
Penthesilea ( Greek: Πενθεσίλεια ) or Penthesileia was an Amazonian queen in Greek mythology, the daughter of Ares and Otrera and the sister of Hippolyta, Antiope and Melanippe.
By the time Euripides mentioned Dodona ( fragmentary play Melanippe ), and Herodotus wrote about the oracle, priestesses had been restored.
She presented the children of Melanippe to her husband, as if they were her own.
In Greek mythology, Arne ( Ἄρνη ) or Melanippe ( Μελανίππη ) was a daughter of Aeolus and Melanippe ( also Hippe or Euippe ), daughter of Chiron.
In Greek mythology, Melanippe referred to several different people.
Strabo cites two other accounts, in which Melanippe was said to have been handed over either to Metabus or to Dius.
Later, however, she did give birth to two sons, but Metapontus was already more fond of the sons of Melanippe.
Having found out about their true descent from Poseidon, they released their natural mother Melanippe from prison, and Poseidon restored her sight.
Two tragedies by Euripides, Melanippe The Prisoner and Melanippe The Philosopher, were dedicated to this character.
Some say that it was Melanippe whom Theseus abducted and married.
The Meleagrids included Melanippe and Eurymede, possibly also Mothone and Perimede.
Amphictyon had a son, Itonus, who in his turn became the father of Boeotus, Iodame and Chromia by Melanippe.

emendation and for
When he had completed his work, it was handed over to, nay rather thrust upon, me for emendation.
Ceratophora was also an emendation for the dinoflagellate genus Ceratophorus ( now Neoceratium ) and the heteropod genus Cerophora ( now Firoloida ).
Pei compiled the teachings from his own notes and sent the manuscript to the senior monks on Mount Huangbo for further editing and emendation.
For example, an intentionalist would consider for emendation the following cases:
Within the ICZN there has been a proposed emendation of spelling to Clionaidae for the sponge family.
It yielded no materials of value for the emendation of the received text, and by disregarding the vowel points overlooked the one thing in which some result ( grammatical if not critical ) might have been derived from collation of Massoretic manuscripts.
" This is due, however, to a corruption of the text, for, according to Luria's skilful emendation, this phrase must be read with the preceding words " Ezra and the men of the Great Synagogue "; so that the phrase corresponds to the " bene ha-golah " of Ezra x.
Birch's suggested emendation to 725 is still unsatisfactory, since it is too late for Bishop Eadberht and does not agree with the indication ".
An emendation in the Wendover text from ' died in 590 ' to ' died aged 90 ' would give a date of 567 for the devolvement on Wessex, assuming Cissa was born in 477 ( Slaughter ).

emendation and name
This is an emendation by Carl Peter Thunberg ( 1789 ) of Fabricius's original name, and is not valid.
Although the name is always fixed to the type specimen, the circumscription ( i. e. range of specimens that may be included within the taxon ) is defined by the diagnosis and can be changed by formal emendation.

emendation and one
For example, when it was suggested on the occasion of an address to Queen Victoria, to be presented by her judges, that a passage in it, " conscious as we are of our shortcomings ," suggested too great humility, he proposed the emendation " conscious as we are of one another's shortcomings "; and on another occasion he defined a jurist as " a person who knows a little about the laws of every country except his own ".
In textual criticism he was a conservative, but by no means a slavish one ; indeed, his opponents accused him of rashness in emendation.

emendation and on
He apparently ( based on an emendation of a corrupt passage in Tacitus's Annals ) declared his intention to disarm all the Britons south and east of the rivers Trent and Severn.
But this supposition depends on a merely conjectural emendation of the text.
Campbell worked on the emendation of Horace ( 1924 ) and published this as Horace Odes and Epodes ( University of Liverpool Press, 1953 ).
Newman's work covered many spheres: he wrote on logic, political economy, English reforms, Austrian politics, Roman history, diet, grammar, the most abstruse departments of mathematics, Arabic, the emendation of Greek texts, and languages as out of the way as the Berber and as obsolete as the dialect of the Iguvine inscriptions.
A recension is made by comparing extant manuscripts and producing a new version, an emendation, based on the text that seems best to the editor.
This work included a considerable description sufficient to distinguish the order from all others, but Schuster relied on the 1972 emendation by Schljakov to provide the Latin diagnosis required by the International Code of Botanical Nomenclature.

emendation and .
The Hebrew text of Joel seems to have suffered little from scribal transmission, but is at a few points supplemented by the Septuagint, Syriac, and Vulgate versions, or by conjectural emendation.
An interesting, but doubtful, emendation makes this poem describe the nun of Shamal, a state in northwest Syria.
" Some of the internal documents were composed after the reign of Pepin the Short, but it is considered to be an emendation initiated by Pepin, and is therefore termed the Pipina Recensio.
Two of the sections are dated to 768 and 778, but the emendation is believed to be dated to 798, late in the reign of Charlemagne.
The stemmatic method's final step is emendatio, also sometimes referred to as " conjectural emendation.
The spelling emendation cyanota is suggested by Rasmussen and Anderton.
The ease with which he restored corrupted passages, the certainty of his emendation and command over the relevant material, are in a style totally different from the careful and laborious learning of Hody, Mill or Edmund Chilmead.
Some of his 700 or 800 emendation have been accepted, but the majority were rejected by the early 20th century as unnecessary, although scholars acknowledged they showed his wide learning.
He was an intimate friend of Richard Porson, whom he took as his model in textual criticism, although he showed less caution in conjectural emendation.
He may have been over-enthusiastic in his emendation of difficult passages, ignoring the comments of other scholars.
Other revisions included modernization of several words and phrases, substitution of inclusive language where appropriate, correction of spelling and typographical errors, alteration of punctuation to conform to modern standards, and emendation of a few historical inaccuracies.
Christopher Tolkien also notes, with interest, that in the Lexicon, the word Gnome ( later Noldor ) is an emendation from Goblin.
Soellner says that such emendations erode the importance of this motif, and suggests a better emendation would be " from " to " form ," creating a mixed metaphor " revelatory of the poet's inanity.
One odd emendation that often appears near the end of the play is Alcibiades commanding his troops to " cull th ' infected fourth " from the Senate, as if he intends to destroy a fourth of the Senate.
After he returned from Rome, he published a second volume of miscellaneous criticism ( Antiquarum Lectionum Libri Quinque, 1575 ); compared with the Variae Lectiones of eight years earlier, it shows that he had advanced from the notion of purely conjectural emendation to that of emending by collation.
The emendation of Livy was also a topic discussed in book IV of his Antidotum in Facium, an invective against Bartolomeo Facio.
In this part of the treatise, which also circulated independently under the title Emendationes in T. Livium, Valla elucidates numerous corrupt passages and criticises the attempts at emendation made by Panormita and Facio, his rivals at the court of Alfonso the Magnanimous.
What is evident, however, is that any part of the Translation might have been further touched upon and improved by additional revelation and emendation by Smith.
Shortly before the phrase in Acts 3: 21 comes, in or, the similar phrase, " times of refreshing ", Nineteenth-century " Eckermann interprets the ' apocatastasis of all things ' to mean the universal emendation of religion by the doctrine of Christ, and the ' times of refreshing ' to be the day of renewal, the times of the Messiah.
He made an attempt toward a critical examination of the text ; and thus, very often with a single reference to a parallel passage, or with a textual emendation, he overthrew tenuous decisions made by his rabbinic predecessors.

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